Misplaced Pages

Flying Childers

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
British Thoroughbred racehorse
Flying Childers
Flying Childers by James Seymour
SireDarley Arabian
DamBetty Leedes
DamsireOld Careless
SexStallion
Foaled1715
CountryGreat Britain
ColourBay
BreederColonel Leonard Childers of Cantley Hall
Owner2nd Duke of Devonshire
Record6 starts, 6 wins
Awards
Leading sire in GB and Ireland (1730, 1736)
Honours
Flying Childers Stakes at Doncaster Racecourse

Flying Childers (1715–1741) was a famous undefeated 18th-century thoroughbred racehorse, foaled in 1714 at Carr House, Warmsworth, Doncaster, and is sometimes considered as the first truly great racehorse in the history of thoroughbreds and the first to catch the public imagination.

Breeding

Flying Childers was sired by the great Darley Arabian, one of the three foundation stallions of the thoroughbred breed. His dam, Betty Leedes, was by (Old) Careless, and she was inbred to Spanker in the second and third generations (2x3). Betty Leedes was also the dam of the unraced, but successful sire, Bartlett's or Bleeding Childers who was also by the Darley Arabian. (Old) Careless was by the great stallion Spanker, and both were thought to be the best racehorses of their generation. Betty Leedes was one of the few outside mares allowed to breed to the Darley Arabian, who was mostly kept as a private sire by his owner.

Racing record

Flying Childers gained the name of his breeder, Colonel Leonard Childers, in addition to his owner, the Duke of Devonshire, often being referred to as either Devonshire Childers or Flying Childers or sometimes simply Childers. Although the Duke received many offers for the colt, including one to pay for the horse's weight in gold, he remained the animal's owner throughout his life.

First racing at age six, the 15.2-hand colt won his maiden race, held April 1721 at Newmarket, to defeat Speedwell over four miles. He then won his second race in October, also at Newmarket, in a walk over, and his third race against Almanzor. It is said he completed this race, over the Round Course at Newmarket, in 6 minutes, 40 seconds and that he reached a speed of 82 1/2 feet per second or 1 mile per minute. This was claimed to make Flying Childers the only horse on record as having matched the top speed of the unbeaten Eclipse. By way of comparison, this would be nearly 40 seconds faster than the unbeaten Frankel ran the Newmarket Rowley Mile in his famous 2,000 Guineas victory of 2011, over 30 seconds faster than the current mile track record and very close to the five furlong track record set by Lochsong in 1994.

As a seven-year-old, he won his one start, a race at Newmarket where he beat Chaunter. In 1723, he won both his starts by walk over, one in April at Newmarket, the other a matchrace against Bobsey, who forfeited. Flying Childers then retired to stud.

Summary

James Seymour - "Flying Childers Galloping to Left, Bridled but not Saddled" (Yale Center for British Art)
Date Race name Dist (miles) Course Prize Odds Runners Place Runner-up
April 1721 Match race v. Speedwell 4 Newmarket 500 guineas not known 2 1 Speedwell
October 1721 Match race v. Speedwell not known Newmarket 500 guineas not known 2 1 forfeit
1721 Trial v. Almanzor and Brown Betty 4 Newmarket none not known 3 1 not known
October 1722 Match race v. Chaunter 6 Newmarket 1000 guineas not known 2 1 Chaunter
April 1723 Race v. Stripling and Bridgewater's Lonsdale Mare not known Newmarket 100 guineas not known 3 1 forfeit
November 1723 Match race v. Bobsey not known Newmarket 100 guineas not known 2 1 forfeit

Stud record

Flying Childers stood as a private stallion at the Duke's Chatsworth estate in Derbyshire, until his death in 1741 at age 26. His offspring included several full-siblings from the Basto Mare: Blacklegs (br. 1728), a successful racehorse and sire for the Duke, Snip (b. 1736), a poor racehorse who sired the great stallion (Old) Snap, Second (br. 1732), who defeated both Sultan and Partner in 1737, Bay Basto (1729), Hip (1733), and Brown Basto (1738).

He also sired Spanking Roger (ch. 1732), who was undefeated against some of the best horses in the country except for one race where he threw his rider, Roundhead (ch. 1733), Fleec'em, Steady, and Blaze (b. 1733). Blaze was especially important, producing Sampson (his descendant Messenger is the founding sire of the Standardbred and very important in the Tennessee Walking Horse), Scrub, Childers (owned by John Tayloe II of Mount Airy Stud), and Shales (founding sire of the Norfolk Roadster, great influence on the Hackney). Lastly, Flying Childers was the damsire of the important foundation Thoroughbred sire Herod.

He died in 1741, aged 26. It was said he was "the fleetest horse that ever ran at Newmarket or, as generally believed, that was ever bred in the world".

Legacy

The Flying Childers Inn, Stanton in Peak, Derbyshire

Such was the horse's fame that pubs were named after him, including at Bessacarr in his home town Doncaster, South Yorkshire, Stanton in Peak, Derbyshire, and Kirby Bellars, Leicestershire.

Sire line tree

  • Childers (Flying)
    • Childers (Hampton Court)
      • Tantrum
    • Blacklegs
    • Grey Childers (Chedworth)
    • Plaistow
    • Fleec'em
    • Second
      • Merlin
        • Young Merlin
        • Prospero
        • Petit Maitre
      • Leedes
      • Sharp
    • Spanking Roger
    • Blaze
    • Hip
    • Roundhead
      • Roger of the Vale
      • Stadtholder
      • Joseph Andrews
    • Steady
    • Ball
    • Snip
      • Snap
        • Snap (Hazard)
        • Omnium
          • Ovid
          • Xanthippus
          • Hippogriff
          • Omnium
        • Snap (Latham)
        • Lofty
        • Snap (Chedworth)
        • Mambruello
        • Snipe
        • Ancient Pistol
          • Ancient Pistol
          • Hardwicke
        • Goldfinder
          • Goldfinder
          • Molecatcher
        • Juniper
          • Young Juniper
          • Dromedary
        • Scaramouch
        • Mexican
      • Prince T'Quassaw
        • Tickler
        • Hottentot
      • Judgment
      • Fribble
      • Swiss
      • Young Snip
        • Ferdinando

Pedigree

Pedigree of Childers (Flying), bay stallion, 1715
Sire
Darley Arabian
b. c.1700
(unknown) (unknown) (unknown)
(unknown)
(unknown) (unknown)
(unknown)
(unknown) (unknown) (unknown)
(unknown)
(unknown) (unknown)
(unknown)
Dam
Betty Leedes c.1702
Old Careless c.1692 Spanker*
b. c.1670
D'Arcy Yellow Turk
Old Morocco Mare*
Barb mare c.1682 (unknown)
(unknown)
Cream Cheeks c.1692 Leedes Arabian
blk. c.1685
(unknown)
(unknown)
Charming Jenny c.1680 Spanker*
Old Morocco Mare*

* Flying Childers is inbred 3D × 4D to the stallion Spanker, meaning that he appears third generation and fourth generation on the dam side of his pedigree.

* Flying Childers is inbred 4D × 4D to the mare Old Morocco Mare, meaning that she appears twice in fourth generation on the dam side of his pedigree.

See also

References

  1. ^ Thomas Hornby Morland (1810). Genealogy of the English racehorse. London: J. Barfield. p. 72.
  2. Thoroughbred Bloodlines Childers (GB), accessdate = 2017-03-26
  3. ^ "Portrait: Flying Childers". www.tbheritage.com.
  4. Guest, Kristen; Mattfeld, Monica (2019-11-26), "Horse breeds", Horse Breeds and Human Society, Routledge, pp. 1–9, doi:10.4324/9780429024009-1, ISBN 9780429024009, S2CID 242487456, retrieved 2021-09-05
  5. Barrett, Norman, ed. (1995). The Daily Telegraph Chronicle of Horse Racing. Enfield, Middlesex: Guinness Publishing. p. 9.
  6. Ahnert, Rainer L. (editor in chief), Thoroughbred Breeding of the World, Pozdun Publishing, Germany, 1970
  7. Tb Heritage
  8. ^ Whyte 1840, p. 424.
  9. ^ Whyte 1840, p. 425.
  10. Whyte 1840, p. 131.
  11. Edwards, Dave (2011-05-02). "He went at a Group 1 sprinter's pace for the first five furlongs". Racing Post. Retrieved 2013-05-02.
  12. "Darley Arabian Line". www.tbheritage.com.
  13. "Thoroughbred Bloodlines Sire Lines Darley Arabian". www.bloodlines.net.
  14. "Biography: Flying Childers". www.bloodlines.net.
  15. Studbook: Early C
  16. ^ "Foundation Sire: Second". www.tbheritage.com.
  17. "Biography: Second". www.bloodlines.net.
  18. "Foundation Sire: Merlin". www.tbheritage.com.
  19. Biography: Spanking Roger
  20. Foundation Sire: Blaze
  21. Biography: Blaze
  22. Foundation Sire: Sampson
  23. Biography: Sampson
  24. Foundation Sire: Engineer
  25. Biography: Engineer
  26. Foundation Sire: Mambrino
  27. Biography: Mambrino
  28. Biography: Bay Malton
  29. ^ Whyte 1840
  30. Doncaster Cup Winners
  31. ^ Hackney Horse
  32. Pedigree: Bellfounder
  33. Harness Museum: Hambletonian
  34. "Thoroughbred Foundation Sire: Roundhead". www.tbheritage.com.
  35. Foundation Sire: Snip
  36. Foundation Sire: Snap
  37. Biography: Snap
  38. Foundation Sire: Omnium
  39. Studbook: Early NO
  40. Foundation Sire: Snap (Latham)
  41. Foundation Sire: Snap (Chedworth)
  42. Studbook: Early M
  43. Foundation Sire: Ancient Pistol
  44. CHAPTER XVII. MESSENGER AND HIS ANCESTORS
  45. Foundation Sire: Goldfinder
  46. Biography: Goldfinder
  47. Foundation Sire: Juniper
  48. Studbook: Early S
  49. "Foundation Sire: Prince Tquassaw". www.tbheritage.com.
  50. "Foundation Sire: Young Snip". www.tbheritage.com.

Sources

External links

Categories:
Flying Childers Add topic